Despite social media reports, Lamb said the emergency department didn’t run out of nasal Naloxone — the overdose reversing drug commonly referred to by its brand name Narcan.

From 2 p.m. Thursday to 11 p.m. Friday last week, 19 overdose patients were transported to local emergency rooms from Clark County, according to an alert from the Ohio Department of Health’s system that tracks drug-related ER visits. Three consecutive alerts were triggered because the number of overdose visits surpassed the average for each 12-hour period.

It was the second such alert this month, which local health leaders say has been caused by a batch of synthetic fentanyl.

The average in a day is usually around five or six, Clark County Health Commissioner Charles Patterson said. And ER visits make up just a portion of the total overdose incidents because some people refuse transport to the hospital after being revived by first responders, Patterson said.

The Springfield Fire/Rescue Division has seen an increase in drug overdose runs over the past two months, Chief Nick Heimlich said.

The recent rash in overdoses hasn’t affected the division’s ability to respond to calls because its staffing is robust in January due to a lack of vacation requests, Heimlich said.

“The impact has been abated somewhat by that,” he said. “If this was June or July, there would be no question in my mind, (the rash of overdoses) would’ve had a bigger impact on that.”

If the rash of overdoses continue, Heimlich said it could affect local safety forces ability to purchase Narcan. First responders typically use a nasal version of the product to revive patients before being taken to the emergency room, sometimes using multiple doses.

The demand for the drug has increased because it’s now available to the public, Heimlich said.

“It put a uniquely rapid demand on the production for Narcan,” he said. “They’re still recovering from that.”

Narcan also does nothing to address the addiction, Heimlich said. He’d like to see more money spent on treatment programs.

“The problem is much larger than Narcan and first responders,” Heimlich said. “The worst thing we can do after the 30-day clean period is to send them back into the same environment with the same people and their addiction hasn’t gone away yet. They need extended treatment and counseling.”

The state health department is expected to replenish the county’s supply of Narcan kits this week, Patterson said.

Earlier this month, Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed into law a measure to combat the heroin and opiate addiction in Ohio, including requiring pharmacy technicians to register with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy and limit opiate prescriptions.

Despite investing almost $1 billion a year to fight drug abuse and addiction, accidental overdoses claimed 3,050 lives in Ohio in 2015, up 20.5 percent over 2014.

The rash of overdoses is worse than ever, said Springfield Soup Kitchen operator Fred Stegner. It’s the third round of overdoses since late December, he said.

Stegner had three overdoses at the Soup Kitchen last year and purchased Narcan kits in case of more overdoses.

Stegner received several calls for assistance from clients last weekend who were struggling with the disease. The drug is so powerful addicts continue to shoot up despite the consequences, including death, he said.

“They know this could be the end, the last one,” Stegner said. “They don’t care.”